'Israel won't change its policies'

Ahead of US visit, PM stresses Jerusalem is no different from Tel Aviv.

By JPOST.COM STAFF

March 21, 2010 11:54

1 minute read.

netanyahu flag 311.
(photo credit: AP)

Israeli will neither change policies that have been upheld by its various governments
since 1967 nor halt construction in Jerusalem, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu stressed at Sunday's cabinet meeting.

“We will clarify that building in Jerusalem is like building in Tel Aviv,” Netanyahu said. A final-status agreement between Israel and the Palestinians, he said, could only be reached at the conclusion of direct talks in which the two sides "sit together and sort the issues out." The prime minister said that the planned proximity talks – indirect negotiations with US mediation – would enable the two sides to individually state their case, but would not facilitate an enduring peace process.

Netanyahu said his position would remain unflagging during his visit to Washington later on Sunday, and that he would clarify that to the Obama administration.

While in the US, Netanyahu will attend the AIPAC conference and meet with several US officials.

Prior to the cabinet meeting, Defense Minister Ehud Barak - who will be accompanying Netanyahu to Washington - expressed hope that negotiations with the Palestinians would be renewed this week. “I hope we will begin to advance on a track of intensive negotiations, and not just proximity talks,” Channel 10 quoted him as saying.

According to the news channel, Welfare Minister Isaac Herzog assessed
that Israel would eventually adopt “former [US] president [Bill]
Clinton’s formula – whatever is in Jewish hands stays in Israel, and
whatever is in Palestinian hands stays Palestinian.”

Meanwhile on Sunday, former foreign minister Shlomo Ben-Ami told Army
Radio that the Obama administration was liable to present a unilateral
plan to “force a peace agreement on the Israelis and Palestinians."

Citing an American official, Ben-Ami said the US was planning to
present its own plan for peace in the Middle East, and that such
pressure could cause the Netanyahu coalition to crumble.

Last week, leading figures in the Obama administration, among them US
Vice President Joe Biden and US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton, expressed severe criticism of Israel for approving new Jewish
construction in Jerusalem even as the peace process hovers on the brink
of renewal and the Arab population of the capital continues to protest
the municipality’s home demolitions.

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